Great article, Ray, thanks for passing it along.  Talk later. 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Boyce 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, April 09, 2009 11:44 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] First aid for your computer





  Does your PC or laptop sometimes run slowly or freeze? Stick this article on
  the fridge: it could save your machine's life and your sanity, writes Dan
  Warne.

  If your computer has been running slower lately, no doubt you've sought help
  from friends, family and the IT people at work. Suggestions may range from
  the merely outdated "have you defragged it?" to the misinformed "there's too
  many icons on your desktop . . . they're clogging it up" or the fatalistic
  "mate, nothing will fix it except blowing it away and starting again".

  We've all heard the lines and none of them are particularly helpful. In
  fact, the computer industry thrives on people who've been given bad advice,
  throw up their hands in despair and end up buying a new PC.

  Here are some ways to clear out your computer and get it back to optimal
  performance.

  Find stuck programs and kill them

  This is a technique you need to keep in mind at all times, because you'll
  need it frequently. Since modern PCs can run many programs at once,
  sometimes you won't notice when one is stuck. Worse, these programs will
  often consume more and more processing power, slowing down the rest of your
  computer. Fortunately, they are easy to find.

  On Windows XP or Vista, press Ctrl+Shift+Esc, which will bring up the
  Windows Task Manager. Click on the "processes" tab to see all the software
  running on your system. Click the "CPU" column heading to sort the column in
  descending order. This will show apps using the most CPU at the top. Look at
  the list for 30 seconds or so and if one is consistently using a very high
  percentage of CPU time, it might be a hung program. You can click on the
  process name and then the "end process" button to kill the troublesome app
  (note, this will instantly shut down the app and you won't have an
  opportunity to save any files).

  On a Mac, you can use the Activity Viewer to see hung apps. This is found in
  the Applications/Utilities folder. Open it up and click the "CPU" column
  heading until the applications are listed by their CPU usage, from highest
  to smallest. If one is consistently using a very high percentage of CPU
  time, it may be stuck and you can click on the program name then click the
  "Quit Process" button on the toolbar. Programs listed in red are ones that
  OS X has detected are hung (though this is not always accurate - sometimes a
  big app like iPhoto is just taking a long time to save its database and
  close down).

  Find apps that have been causing problems

  Most people don't know this but your computer keeps a log of just about
  everything you do. A lot of it looks like gobbledegook but it can surrender
  useful hints about what's going wrong.

  On Windows, to view the system log, go to Control Panel. If it says "switch
  to classic view" in the left column, click that. Then click "administrative
  tools" and then "event viewer". In the event viewer that opens, select
  "Application" or "System" from the column on the left. You can then scroll
  down the log and look for warnings (yellow exclamation mark) or errors (red
  cross). Double-clicking on one of these entries will show you the detail of
  the error. It might not mean anything to you but you can search for the
  error wording on Google to find out what other people did to stop it from
  happening again.

  On a Mac, the app you need is called Console. It's found in the
  Applications/Utilities directory. In the left column, under the "Log
  database queries" heading, click "All messages". This will show all log
  entries from all software on your computer. Scroll through the log file on
  the right-hand side. If you see an error message popping up frequently, you
  can search for the exact message in Google to see if someone else has a
  suggestion about what the problem is.

  Uninstall 'free' apps that came with your computer

  Some major computer makers love to load up their computers with "free"
  software (the truth is, they get paid for it by the software makers and this
  subsidises the cost of the computer so they can sell at a lower cost against
  other manufacturers). This free software can be annoying, pestering you to
  subscribe to the full version and may slow your computer down if it
  auto-loads at startup. This so-called "crap-ware" has annoyed so many people
  that there are specialised programs to help you delete free trials and other
  rubbish that comes on your computer. PC Decrapifier is a program that
  started as Dell Decrapifier and then spread its wings to cover other
  manufacturers' pre-loaded crap, too.

  You might have particular trouble getting rid of some security suites that
  really get their roots deep into the core of Windows. Symantec makes a
  special tool to delete all versions of its Norton security suites
  (www.tinyurl.com/killnorton), as does McAfee (www.tinyurl.com/killmcafee)
  and Zone Alarm (download available at www.tinyurl.com/killzonealarm). You
  can find removal tools for other security suites by Googling "[security
  suite brand] removal tool".

  Apple doesn't load much third-party rubbish onto Macs - though it does load
  some of its own very large apps and sometimes a trial version of Microsoft
  Office. These are mercifully easy to remove - just go to your Applications
  folder and drag the apps to the trash. However, this may not remove all
  traces of an application and some apps like GarageBand and iDVD leave
  gigabytes worth of support files hidden away elsewhere on the hard disk. You
  can delete these by downloading AppCleaner (www.tinyurl.com/appclean) and
  then dragging the icons of the programs you want to delete onto the
  AppCleaner icon. It will then delete the app and all support files.

  Find out what's filling up your drive

  If your hard drive is almost full, it can dramatically slow down your
  computer, because (in a nutshell) when your computer runs out of its
  high-speed memory for running software, it has to start using the hard drive
  as memory. If the computer has plenty of free space, it can use large
  continuous blocks of space for this "swap" memory. However, if the hard
  drive is very full, the computer has to hunt for vacant blocks of space to
  use - and this can be slow.

  Sometimes, there are huge amounts of space taken up on your hard drive by
  things like downloaded movies that you've watched and forgotten about and
  removing them can see great speed improvements.

  Disk space analysers do a wonderful job of exposing the biggest files on
  your disk and helping you delete them (be sure you know what you're
  deleting). On Windows, WinDirStat will do the trick
  (www.tinyurl.com/diskspace) and on OS X, Disk Inventory X (www.derlien.com)
  does a good job.

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